On the topic of differentiating the email addresses given to different
places:
For people with mail servers that behave like sendmail (most of which I
think do?) , things after a '+' in your email address are ignored. So
for example, vlm+shop_talk@te-motorworks.com would be delivered to the
mailbox for vlm@te-motorworks.com, but with the full email address
including the +shop_talk in the TO: field. So I then have that extra
information after the + to do filtering in my mail program. Or with a
filter like procmail.
It is easier to do this in that you don't need to create additional
email accounts or bother your system administrator. The only place
where I've found that it comes back to bite me is when I've forgotten my
password for a site that uses the email address as the user name. I can
never remember what +such and such I added to my email address when I
created the account. Though a systematic naming scheme would help
here.
-vin
On Mon, 2007-02-05 at 09:11 -0500, eric@megageek.com wrote:
> What I do is create a new account for each service I give my email to.
> Like my account for ebay, would be something like "ebay1@domain.com" My
> bank is "bank1@domain.com." This helps me track down most sources of spam
> and stop them. When I find out that a website sold my email address, I
> just forward that address to their customer serive account and stop using
> that website. So if I get email addressed to "enron@domain.com," I know
> that enron sold the email address and I forward that address and stop using
> enron. (enron is jsut an example name.) This also makes phishing almost
> impossible. If I get an email to ebay1@domain.com, and it's talking about
> my bank account, I know it's a phish mail. Of course this requires have
> your own domain and own mailserver. But it's a small price to pay to be
> able to track and stop spam. Inch "We all know we're dying, And there's no
> sign of a parachute." Tori Amos
--
T.E. Motorworks, Inc.
Post Industrial Laboratory
215.426.1447
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